Dan,
in http://www.w3.org/TR/uri-clarification/ I read "An http URI is a URL" . So I concluded that a different
http URI is a different URL (address). At this I assumed, that all http URIs which refer to the same address
(case insensitive), are defined as "identical". Is this correct?
Best,
Wolfgang
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dan Brickley" <danbri@danbri.org>
To: "Wolfgang Orthuber" <orthuber@kfo-zmk.uni-kiel.de>
Cc: "David Booth" <david@dbooth.org>; "semantic-web" <semantic-web@w3.org>; "Linked Data community"
<public-lod@w3.org>
Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2009 12:51 PM
Subject: Re: numeric web search (Was: URLs instead of URNs)
> On 26/5/09 14:45, Wolfgang Orthuber wrote:
> [...]
>> Though different HTTP URIs always refer to different addresses
>
> Where do you get this from?
>
> Do you mean "though different HTTP URIs are different URIs"?
>
> http://example.com:80/foo
>
> and
>
> http://EXAMple.COM/foo
>
> ...both address (or fail to address) the same thing.
>
> If you want to consider these different "addresses" (for potentially the same thing), you're welcome. But
> the rules of HTTP URIs mean that there's nothing named (addressed) by the one but not by the other. Domain
> names are case insensitive, and HTTP URIs default to port 80.
>
> There are other situations where we might say a pair of HTTP URIs happen accidentally (perhaps for a while,
> perhaps forever) to be for the same underlying thing. But the example above is one in which they simply are
> different ways of writing the same thing.
>
> cheers,
>
> Dan
>
>